Where will the people go: Toronto’s Emergency Housing Program and the Limits of Canadian Social Housing Policy, 1944-1957

Click on the image to enlarge it; click again to enlarge it further. We owe thanks to Mississauga Ward 1 Councillor Jim Tovey for sharing this archival photo with us. “This is an image,” Councillor Tovey notes, “of the Federal Men’s Work Camp instituted in 1933, during the Depression. These are the buildings that became the social housing after WW II.”

I have recently learned of a March 1, 2007 paper, in the Journal of Urban History, entitled “Where will the people go: Toronto’s Emergency Housing Program and the Limits of Canadian Social Housing Policy, 1944-1957,” by Kevin Brushett of the Royal Military College of Canada.

The map (click on the image to enlarge it) is from Jim Tovey, in response to a question from Garry Burke (see comments, at the end of this post). Councillor Tovey writes: “My understanding is the social housing was located in the barracks previously occupied by the Lorne Scots after WWII. Here is a map showing showing the barracks. The cluster just south of Lakeshore (in red) and in between the other red line and the creek. I believe the Work Camp was closer to Cawthra Rd. You should check with Mathew Wilkinson at Heritage Mississauga.”

The article, as the abstract notes, challenges the assumptions that Toronto’s homeless were “shiftless welfare bums”

The abstract reads:

“In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Canadian cities dealt with a growing housing shortage while the federal and provincial governments argued over who would implement the provisions of the 1944 National Housing Act. This was particularly true in Toronto. As Torontonians celebrated the construction of Regent Park, Canada’s ‘Premier Slum Clearance and Public Housing Project,’ nearly 1,350 Toronto families were housed in dilapidated old army barracks and staff houses. Until Regent Park, the shelters were Toronto’s only rent-geared-to-income housing project. This article challenges the assumptions that Toronto’s homeless were ‘shiftless welfare bums’ and examines the strategies shelter residents used to survive the often brutal conditions in which they lived and how they hoped to escape them. Finally, it argues that the inability of municipalities to replace emergency shelters with decent affordable housing reveals the long-standing reluctance of Canadian governments to develop social-housing programs to eliminate homelessness.”

Background related to my interest in this topic

I have received messages from Douglas Hanlon on January 2017, through my Preserved Stories website, and am pleased to have the opportunity to follow up on his messages.

Mr. Hanlon has a close, personal connection to wartime and postwar housing in Canada. He would like me to post information at my website about the housing that was in place, in those years. He would like this information to be more widely known, including among the grandchildren of former residents of wartime-era housing in Canada. I would like to follow through on his request.

I have contacted a number of people and am starting to organize the material related to Canada’s wartime housing.

Any information and links that you, as a site visitor, would be able to share would be much appreciated.

Updates: Comment from Graeme Decarie

Graeme, a retired Concordia University history professor, has commented:

I can’t even pretend to know much about those houses – but I do know a little bit about the reason for them.

These went up, usually in blocks, at the end of the war. All were one and a half stories. All had asbestos shingles. I remember my father taking us to see one when he got back from the navy. But, at $3,000, it was hopelessly out of our reach.

The reason for them was more subtle.

MacKenzie King was no socialist or people’s politician. He was a cold and calculating man. But he profoundly wanted to stay in power. He came to power in the late 1930s, and he embarked on welfare projects begun by R.B. Bennett, a coldly wealthy man who was quite reformed as he came to realize the suffering of the Depression. So King had to stay on that path. As well, he had to allow government to take full control over the economy. (This was not King’s style. He was the pet poodle of the business elite. But without government control, the economy would have gone haywire, and the country might well have collapsed.)

In the course of the war, he was under tremendous pressure to maintain morale by telling people what it was they were fighting for (besides adoration of the king).

One of the morale boosters he hit on was relatively cheap housing for returning soldiers. He did it – strictly because he had to do something…..

“Obviously the most convenient and economical way of providing the community with an adequate supply of decent accommodation is through the economic market for new housing. If those who can afford to own or to rent new housing could maintain such a volume of production that every family could be well-housed and obsolete housing could be successively removed, then in the process of time there would be no housing problem. All the resources of science and industry must be applied to the removal of the obstructions at the point where, in a free economy, the bulk of the housing supply should be concentrated – at the mid-point in the income scale. Unless a balance in the ratio between incomes and housing costs can be established, the shortage will continue to stack up against families in the lower-income ranges. Unhappily, any study of the economic factors involved seems to lead inevitably to the conclusion that a balance of incomes and housing costs is most unlikely to be established at a level which would produce an adequate supply of housing. This has certainly been the experience of all other industrialized nations and there are no factors peculiar to our economy which indicate that Canada is likely to be an exception to this experience. In fact, the requirements of shelter in our stern climate are likely to make the economics of housing in Canada especially intractable.”

Housing challenges call for ingenuity, which takes many forms. A Jan. 23, 2017 Toronto Star article is entitled: “Thank you for being a friend . . . I can buy a house with: Meet a new generation of golden girls: Shared home ownership of a renovated heritage house in Port Perry gives aging owners a comfortable – and affordable – place to grow old.”

42 Responses to Where will the people go: Toronto’s Emergency Housing Program and the Limits of Canadian Social Housing Policy, 1944-1957

So many articles and papers are available regarding the topic of housing. Here are a few of them.

A Jan. 12, 2017 Canadian Press article in the Toronto Star is entitled: “Federal government looks at creating new housing benefit for low-income renters: Generally, housing benefits are provided to renters who need help paying the bills, but if a renter moves to a new unit, the supplement doesn’t follow.”

A Jan. 20, 2017 Toronto Star article is entitled: “Big city mayors to demand cash for social housing: Canada’s big city mayors to meet in Ottawa Friday where they’re expected to push for urgent funding to repair social housing.”

The latter book, which I read with interest some years ago, is no longer available for loan at the Toronto Public Library; it is now Reference only. I have discussed the study in a November 2011 post entitled:

The 1933 photo of the Federal Men’s Work Camp is most interesting. But those huts are not the ones families moved into after the war. The huts I vividly remember had been had been built specifically for the army. Do you know where the Men’s Work Camp was located? Might those shanties have been levelled for army barracks at he outbreak of the war?

Our Hut 7 bordered a large parade square, and was near the water tower that stood long after the Army Camp was demolished. At the south end of the square was a large boiler building that chugged out the hot water that heated all the huts, and provided hot water for showers and laundry.

Three years ago I jumped through hoops trying to get into records of the Camp and Staff House gathering dust in the provincial archives. Most of the records are still “restricted,” most annoying. I wondered who the lucky person was who perused the material I wanted and thought, “Gosh. This is too personal, too risqué.” What was given me was…not worth reading.

I look back at Camp and Staff House life and shake my head. It was barely better than an existence. But my parents always told us, when we grumbled about having so little, that they had lived under much tougher conditions in Northern Ontario during Dirty Thirties. As kids, we always found things to do. The buildings were literally overrun with children. My sister and I both paraphrase that great line from Charles Dickens’ “Tale of Two Cities:” “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”

I have sent out some messages to several people, including to Mississauga Ward 1 Councillor Jim Tovey, to see if they can help us find answers to the questions, regarding the 1933 photo, that you have raised.

Some of the best material, for historians, is made available when archives are finally opened, after being hidden from view for decades. Let us hope that a time will come when the provincial archives, dealing with the records of the Camp and Staff House, are opened.

I look forward to sharing much more information, such as concerning details of your own childhood experiences at the Camp and Staff House, at the Preserved Stories website. I’m really pleased that Douglas Hanlon, who has moved from one place to another a total of 150 times in his life, contacted me with the hope that I would gather together information about Toronto-area emergency housing in the 1940s and 1950s. I have taken on the task and am delighted that there are many people out there, such as yourself and also Cairine Johnson, who have some great stories to share!

I will be organizing material, from the emails that you and also Cairine have sent me recently, and will post the material at this website. At the same time, I’m also working on studying available resources, at the Toronto Public Library and online, that describe the overall housing situation, as well as the emergency housing situation, in the Greater Toronto Area in the 1940s and 1950s. Plus there are other history-related (and storytelling-related) projects that I am working on, and that also tie in with the topic at hand.

I have cleared my desk, made myself comfortable, and am working on this project with much interest and enthusiasm.

Thanks, Jaan. There is an excellent published article on Emergency Housing sites following the war, GECO, Stanley Barracks, Little Norway, etc. It was that article that sent me running to the archives, which turned out like trying to get into personal letters of the medieval popes. I’ll have to unearth it from my very disorganized filing system. I believe it was published in sociology journal.

Thee was a very nasty piece in a Mississauga publication seven or eight years ago. The writer , who knew nothing about the Camp and Staff House, labelled them “black eyes” in Lakeview, inhabited by lazy welfare recipients. He did admit a few of the folks may have been truly down on their luck.

One had to take extreme caution, he wrote, whenever entering the grounds of those rundown buildings. I took the man to task, and he admitted that what he had written was based on hearsay. He must have interviewed one, maybe two, very uninformed residents. But I’m sure that for many folks of Lakeview and Port Credit, those building were indeed an eyesore, just like many public housing buildings today in the GTA. But the Camp and Staff house were very safe; no gangs, guns or drugs then. And no racial issues.

Who knows, people may have used the term “white trash” for tenants in those buildings. You couldn’t really blame them after seeing, every Saturday morning, the beer delivery truck parked, and the driver lugging in cases. My parents always ordered two, sometimes three. I always grit my teeth when I recall when they switched to powdered milk, not bottled, to “save money.” Powdered milks in the early ’50s was like coloured water. But they did same money; we hardly touched it. More cash for those Saturday morning beer deliveries?

One blessing for our family was the monthly baby bonus allowance. Always on time, and we really depended on that cheque for the week’s groceries.

Please let me know, Garry, what the name of the sociology article is, that you read some time ago, if you are able to locate it. I would like to read it, for sure. The Kevin Brushett (2007) article is one that I’ve posted a link for, and am currently writing a post summarizing its contents.

Over the years, I’ve encountered anecdotal remarks about the Emergency Housing at Small Arms Ltd., during conversations in the course of events at or near the Small Arms Building in recent years. I’ve also read at least one published account, again based on anecdotal remarks, in a Mississauga business newspaper.

I could sense at once that such anecdotal accounts are based on hearsay, and serve to mindlessly repeat stereotypical views in the absence of first-hand evidence. In contrast, the experiences that you have shared, and other people who have actually lived in the postwar buildings have shared, offer a more accurate, balanced, and nuanced view of things.

I look forward to learning, and sharing, more information with a focus on accurate and balanced reporting. I am delighted to know of your own experiences – such as about the beer, the powdered milk, the monthly baby bonus allowance, the appearance of the buildings, and other details – and look forward to learning much more, and sharing (through posts at this website) what I learn.

Among the small details that I’ve learned, and that I look forward to learning more about, is that kids (probably living, I imagine, in nearby postwar housing) used to play hide-and-seek around the wooden baffles located at the Long Branch Rifle Ranges between the Small Arms Building and the Lake Ontario shoreline.

“My understanding is the social housing was located in the barracks previously occupied by the Lorne Scots after WWII. Here is a map showing showing the barracks. The cluster just south of Lakeshore (in red) and in between the other red line and the creek.

I believe the Work Camp was closer to Cawthra Rd. You should check with Mathew Wilkinson at Heritage Mississauga.”

Click on the image to enlarge it; click again to enlarge it further

Hey Son…The last e-mail you sent me has the story from Garry Burke regarding the army camp and staff house…He’s right, those pics dont show the real army camp we lived in…He mentioned Hut 7, we lived in hut 13 and across the only street heading west inside the camp had huts 1, 2, 3 around the outside ring road of the camp..outside of that, on the west was the rifle range where we all played on the mounds and in the target bunkers down by the lake…He’s also right about the boiler room that supplied water to all the huts..on the right side of our hut was the fire hall or shed and behind it was the big barn where mr. noble ( one arm only ) the rag or sheeny man collected and bagged in sacks, newspapers and rags and junk…

After Hurricane Hazel hit in 1954 most people were moved to other places, we went right across from small arms into the staff house which was on the west north corner of dixie road and lakeshore and then like most people from those two areas all ended up in various war time houses across the city, we first went to 54 Norway Avenue in the beaches area ( between kenilworth avenue and elmer avenue and kingston road and queen street ) after that we or most people from the army camp and staff house ended up in regent park north…there was no regent park south yet….we lived on the third floor of the first 3 story building west of river street on dundas street….

Point being if Garry Burke was there, I should know him and would like to hear more and see more pics, meantime i think uncle steve has a picture of mom and us four from the camp, moms holding steve cause he was just a baby, so that would be around 1950 or 51…Forward this info to your man and ya, for sure i would be interested in digging further…Dad

Re kids playing hide-and-seek around the wooden baffles between Small Arms and the Lake, that never happened. That area was well fenced for test firing Bern guns during the early 1950s. Climbing that fence, or squeezing under, would have be suicidal during that period.

We did play on the large earthen embankments behind the targets on the rifle range, but never during the summer when army units were using them. One memory I have is being in awe watching tracer rounds being used at night. I had never seen that. I’ve often wondered what the target was. Was some soldier half a mile away in a safe enclosure holding up a light on a pole? Maybe they were told just to fire rounds to see what using tracers were like.

About roaming those fields, there was safety in numbers. You seldom saw a child there alone. I was always with two or three chums, and felt more at ease if one was a year or two older than me. If we spotted other kids, our first thought was, “friend or foe.” If we knew them, and liked them, we waved and joined forces. Those “hunting parties” were usually all male. Occasionally, a girl would be with them, but it had to be a gal considered a “tomboy,” one who handle herself. The character Scout in “To Kill a Mockingbird” reminded me of that type. There were a couple of girls our age in the Camp who were very tough. We respected them, and were careful never to challenge. I learned at an early age those were the very kids to become fiends with, veritable bodyguards.

Talking games, in the Staff House during winter months and after supper, boys would play tag throughout the hallways of the building. Great fun, but it must have be agony for residents hearing hordes of kids racing down the hall, and leaping from landing to landing down the stairwells. There was a myriad of routes you could take in that building, and never go outside. That is a very fond memory. Being a fast runner had its dividends for any boy in the Army Camp and Staff House; there was sometimes safety in speed. Now, I suspect, kids that age are mesmerized sitting quietly in front of a computer after supper.

Good to read your message. I recall how active I was as a child, playing all kinds of games and roaming across my own neighbourhood in Cartierville in Montreal (including on wooded areas) in the mid and late 1950s. I remember at Kindergarten in the early 1950s at Van Horne School in the Snowden district on Montreal, I just loved running all around the recess yard, in all kinds of chasing games, in a crowded recess yard. At recess times in the baby boom years, I guess that recess grounds everywhere in Canada were absolutely swarming with kids having fun. That was so much fun. How much I loved to run! I still make it a point to be physically active.

When I taught Grade 4, I remember students would tell me that among the favourite highlights of Grade 4 was having friends to hang out with and playing with friends at recess.

I will be interested to learn more, from additional sources, regarding the question of whether or not kids played hide-and-seek at the baffles.

The reason I’ve referred to such pursuits is the following paragraph in an online September 2013 City of Mississauga Cultural Heritage Assessment entitled: “Long Branch Outdoor Rifle Range.” The document refers to a single rifle range; the usage I’ve adopted for my website is to speak of it as “ranges.” Anyway, the paragraph in question reads:

Immediately after the end of the War in 1945, the City of Toronto leased all the land as part of the emergency housing program for Toronto area families. The Outdoor Firing Range was no longer being used as a firing range and children would climb the baffles and backstop and use them to play hide-and-seek. However, due to urban and industrial development, shooting resumed on site but only at the Indoor Firing Range in 1968 when the South Peel Rod and Gun Club signed a lease to use the building. Today, the Outdoor Firing Range is a public park with walkways going past several of the wooden baffles. The land is now owned by the Region of Peel.

End

Your first-hand observations are of much value, as they indicate that in the 1950s, some firing was still going on at the rifle ranges.

I will be most interested in exploring this topic further. I like to take very much an evidence-based approach toward such details, as is standard and necessary in any kind of responsible journalism and reporting. In this case, I will be interested to find out, when time permits, what the source is for the above-noted mention of the playing of hide-and-seek. I also look forward to learning of any corroboration of statements, from as many sources as possible, regarding this interesting question.

I just keyboarded a long message and it went…somewhere. Poof! Dang. That never happened when I used to use pen and paper.

Rifle range or rifle ranges? Semantics. We’re talking where the Lakeshore Generating Station stood, all 52 hectares, construction stated in June of ’58 and the facilities closed in 2005(?). Those wooden and sand baffles, still standing behind the lone Small Arms building, were no part of the rifle range(s), and were used exclusively for test firing weapons, particularly Bren guns. They just wanted to make sure they worked. During my years at the Staff House, we frequently heard them doing that. That might have been where the kids played hide-and-seek, but it would have been long after the Small Arms was shut down, and the high fence around those baffles removed. There is still a concrete wall just south of those baffles on the edge of the lake from that era, sadly marred with graffiti. If bullets missed the baffles, they would hit that wall, and you can still see it was hit many times.

There were large earthen mounds, with very large numbered signs, at the south end of the rifle range, on the very edge of the lake. The signs marked the target area for shooters. For example if someone, hundreds of yards away, was assigned to target #1, he could easily locate that point, and then wait until the red target was raised. Directly in front(north) of those earthen mounds were sunken concrete accommodations where soldiers hoisting and lowering the targets kept score. When that was going on, kids kept well away from the rifle range(s). Serious business. During the autumn and spring, we used to play in those bunkers, and sometimes used the two-seater privies.

When I did research on Ontario’s school cadets, I found frequent references in the press of Toronto’s militia units going to the “Long Branch Rifle Range” for practice. That would have been the decade before WW 1. The Boers taught the Brits, and us, the importance of marksmanship with a rifle. There was a shooting range for militia units near Niagara-on-the- Lake, but that was little use for the well-heeled Toronto militiamen. It was a time when Canadians looked down on professional soldiers. A standing army was considered just too expensive, a waste of tax money. The belief was that a citizen army, well trained with the rifle, and having imbibed a smattering of military discipline at two-week summer camps, would be able to repel any invaders. In those times, “invaders” meant Americans. The “militia myth” from the War of 1812 was still very much in vogue. World War 1 would change all that.

Nice to know you’re a War of 1812 aficionado. I have always been disappointed visiting the Lundy’s Lane site. The surroundings are so…sleezy. There at a couple of markers indicating positions of regiments during that battle, and few graves of the combatants, but that’s it. The four or five times I’ve ben there, usually in the evening, the little church/museum was closed. I wrote/complained to Parks Canada, and they were most understanding, hopeful that more funding would enable that tiny site to be take on the appearance of an historic parcel of land. If that battleground had been in the U.S., you can bet no money would have been spared to preserve it in detail. Perhaps the tourist attractions like the Falls, and the casino, Lundy’s Lane just doesn’t draw that many. The times of been there, I’ve been the only person wandering the grounds.

Your comments bring to mind, for me, that each of us deals with history in our own, characteristic way.

I’ve visited a few historic sites in Canada, and have noted that usually there’s not a huge crowd of people joining me on such occasions. Typically, I have the site all to myself. In my case, the lack of interest warrants celebration. As a general rule, people in Canada don’t make a practice of putting people from the past on pedestals. As a rule, Canadians don’t get much excited about history. By way of example, little information is available, in the archival records, concerning the first European settler in Long Branch, Col. Samuel Smith. I like that. I live in Long Branch and initially I knew nothing about local history, and would not have cared less.

The absence of a record about Col. Samuel Smith has meant that, in my case, I began to read about world military history, and about the history of the British empire and the times in which the colonel lived and engaged in warfare on the British side. I first became interested in his story when I learned that, in 1797, he had built a log cabin, at a location within a one-minute walk from where I have lived in Long Branch for the past 20 years. I began such a study project simply as a way to get a sense of what the colonel’s life was about, given that few details, related to his personal life, are available in the historical record.

A few years later now, I’ve learned so many things, and have had the opportunity to share some of what I’ve learned in a variety of venues, including at this website. The more I’ve read, and studied, the more my views about the past have changed – have been modified, and refined. I’ve had the freedom, the opportunity, to do that, because there are not a lot of myths built around such a figure, as the colonel, in Canada. Elsewhere, all manner of myths would have been built around him; it wouldn’t have been as easy for a person to just start reading, and just embark upon a personal project to learn more, and figure out what’s what.

In relation to history, I speak of myths as a way to refer to coherent, cohesive, fake-news stories about the past. The manufacture of such myths, and related traditions, for specified political, social, and purposes related to power relations, is a central feature of nationalisms, ideologies, and strongly held belief systems, in all of their many forms, in many countries around the world.

Canada has its share of myths, of course, but Canadians do not generally make it a practice, so far as I can see, to build their lives, institutions, and life projects around fake-news stories of this nature. The one exception concerns myths as they relate to the country’s current and past relationships with its First Nations citizens. In that area, myths are entrenched, but we appear to be making a measure of progress in dismantling them.

Little, or relatively little, is known in Canada about the decisive battles during the War of 1812 that had the result that the United States dropped its plan to conquer and annex Upper and Lower Canada. Thus when I went to visit the site of the Battle of Crysler’s Farm, I noted that, on that day in the summer a few years ago, that very few people were there, visiting the site. Few people know about the battle. I very much like that. I like the fact that it’s a characteristic of Canada that we do not as a rule use history to promote nationalism.

I had the same experience visiting a War of 1812 exhibit at Fort York in Toronto, some years ago. Almost no one else was there, as I went about checking out a first-rate exhibit. Did it bother me? Not in the least. So long as a few people were there (and it might just have been a slow day), they got a tremendous opportunity to learn something about the past. That’s what matters, in my view. It takes just a few people, a few dedicated individuals, to get all manner of things done in this world.

I am also pleased that in recent decades, an interest has developed in knowing about, and understanding and appreciating, the First Nations contribution to the building of Canada – as, by way of example, the critical role played by First Nations warriors fighting on the British side in the War of 1812. Carl Benn among other historians have made it a point to delve in depth into this aspect of Canadian history. Among my own current projects is a plan to learn much more about the First Nations aspects of local history, in Long Branch and Lakeview. There’s so much to learn, for those of us – whatever our numbers may be – who have an interest in looking back, and connecting what we learn to what we see before us in the here and now.

We can say myth is what is required to make functional a situation or circumstance that is otherwise hard to deal with, that is otherwise more dysfunctional than it is when people are guided by myths. It’s an attempt to gloss over some inconvenient details of life through an attempt at sense-making through mythology.

There are lots of myths associated with Canada but they are not particularly overblown or overwhelming. There is an understanding that the study of history in Canada is open in a healthy way to contention, as each generation creates its own version of history anew. It’s a process in which professional historians and everyday citizens can participate.

I’ve given the matter still further thought. I was reminded of a post from some time back:

So I have to revise my generalization, expressed in a previous comment, suggesting that Canadians are less prone to myths about the past than Americans. Canadians are subject to myths as well, although perhaps one can say that on some occasions, the myths in Canada do not take hold quite as strongly as in the United States, where it appears the myths about that country – such as the myth of American exceptionalism, which reminds me of myths related to the British empire and other empires in history – are really drilled into people every day, from the time they are very young.

I’m reminded, as I think about these things, about a Jan. 4, 2017 Guardian article, entitled: “The Canada experiment: is this the world’s first ‘postnational’ country?: When Justin Trudeau said ‘there is no core identity, no mainstream in Canada’, he was articulating a uniquely Canadian philosophy that some find bewildering, even reckless – but could represent a radical new model of nationhood.”

For relaxation I sometimes read accounts of the War of 1812. By way of example, I’m currently reading a message of Oct. 26, 1813 from Robert Purdy to James Wilkinson, describing the American defeat at the Battle of Chateauguay, one of the two battles that saved Canada in those years. The source is The War of 1812 (2013), published by the Library of America. Wilkinson led the army that was defeated at the Battle of Crysler’s Farm, the other battle that saved Canada.

The larger context also comes to mind. In this regard, a Feb. 14, 2017 London School of Economics and Political Science article is entitled: “Mastering Trump’s mastermind: Sebastian Gorka and the struggle between Islam and the West.”

douglas hanlon every one on mother earth must accept we are all given birth in to the MAN MADE WORLD have no good intention for us and our social family friends we have no freedom freedom is our only need and entitlement in the NATURAL WORLD it the answer where each and every kingdom of one can become all that is and part of all that is us and all our social family friends all made one for the benefit of all around mother earth there are no religions in the heaven there are no church in heaven there only the kingdom of one self god said look on to one self for you are the kingdom of heaven prince and princess have seen more over the last 10000 years then we will see in 2017 there no freedom any more our purpose does not exist we are all living in a dysfunctional MAN MAD WORLD MOTHER EARTH ALL WAY RETURN TO THE NATURAL WORLD just as all the kingdoms of one return to the house of the lord our big brother one day this will all way exists return to the NATURAL WORLD FOR ALL THE NEXT GENERATION for our time is slowly coming to an end canada is a young county for young people not to be exported by religions 5000 years old we are only 150 years old there are no religion in heaven

douglas hanlon emergency housing 1950 longbranch army camp and staff house toronto peel 550 years be for jesus was given birth there was fire then the fire creations began money coins then the foundation of the man made world creation of genocide of all life on mother earth genocide to all the prince and princess purpose of one self the cycle and creation of life genocide to their ideologies one for one one for all the children our and our social families friends prince and princess with out them there would be no purpous for mother earth money is the creation of laziness the creation idleness another genocide the planting of the seeds 550 years be for christ 2017 money apartment building build in the last 15 years can charge twice the rent toronto canada then it will be incoperated across canada then the world genocide world order war were back to 550 be for christ were back to 1950 longbranch army camp and the staff house toronto where do the people go every one now is homeless WE ARE NOW UNDER WORLD ORDER HAVE FAITH WE ARE ALL IN GOD HANDS AND THE POWER OF LOVE MONEY IS THE ROOTS OF NO PUSPOSE HEAVEN IS WAITING

douglas hanlon the toronto emergency housing 1950 longbranch army camp and staff house canada 1954 hurricane hazel MIRACLE all that i have written the last three years i seal it with faith love and a MIRACLE i was to remember when the time came it now the miracle i was ina room with a person that change in to anther person i know in front of my eyes to show me the power that is around all of us and all our socical families frends

douglas hanlon 1950 longbranch army camp the future of children was created 350 years a go in canada addictive drugs harmful effects over 200000 deaths each year worldwide brain damage stroke heart disease liver disease tuberculosis suicide mental illness and many more diseases related to our social family friends meat consumption mad cow disease swine flu bird flu stop eating our social family friend children and many more hearth disease over 17 million lost globally each year tobacco 5.4 million deaths per year worldwide alcohol 665 billion globally vegetarian diet fish the only way to go stop eating our social family friends wwwSupremeMasterTV.com a more addiction of all the other globally is sex addiction created over population in the millions of lost souls from the beginning of time the act of having children and not able to care and feed them generation after generation from the beginning of time genocide to all the unborn

douglas hanlon when all is said and done we all need to return to our for father and mother place of birth this is possible if there are no children given birth for the next 70 years each one need to sacrifice this to return mother earth back to her self a kingdom of one self i only use http://www.suprememastertv/com as a point of interest

douglas hanlon by the year 2030 there will be 2 billion lose souls living in SLUMS on mother earth with no puspose FAITH is all they have many are desendants africa europe asia living in north and south america a long way from home and family it the only way stop having childen for 70 years disease will come people were never ment to live together never the man made world cause the exportation of MOTHER EARTH which created world SLUMS AROUND MOTHER EARTH ALL IT TAKE TO END SLUMS IS STOP HAVING CHILDREN AND RETURN TO THE NATURAL AND CREATE HEAVEN ON MOTHER EARTH ALL THAT IS NEEDED 70 YEARS TO LIVE THEIR LIFE OUT THEN RETURN TO THE HOUSE OF THE LORD IN THE HEAVENS A NEW MOTHER EARTH WILL START IF IT NOT TO LATE

douglas hanlon were will the people go 1950 longbranch army camp hurricane hazel would any one on mother earth ever think is this the world i was giving birth TWO WORLDS THE MAN MADE WORLD ONE NO FREEDOM THE NATURAL WORLD FROM THE BEGINNING OF TIME FREEDOM WHY WOULD I PAY A MORTGAGE FOR 35 YEARS LIVE IN ONE CITY ALL MY LIFE never to journey around my mother earth i have imprison my self my family my social family friends and all the generations to be given birth on a grain of sand in the heavens as i enter heaven there are a million worlds would i knowingly only stay on one world i do not think so there the freedom the joy the love the spirit the soul the present of all that is HOME WITH ALL OUR HEAVENLY CHILDREN AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS CHILDREN AND THE MIRACLE IS ALL THAT IS AND OUR BIG BROTHER WELCOME US HOME TO BE ONCE MORE GIVEN EXTERNAL LIFE FOR ETERNILY

douglas hanlon says 1943 to 1958 toronto emergency housing home cost 3,000 car cost two thousand land cost 2.000 thousand 2017 HOME COST ONE MILLION DOLLARS PLUS ONE MILLION INTEREST MORTGAGE RATES I HAVE WRITTEN FOR THE LAST THREE YEARS TO SEE WHAT GOING ON NOW THE CITY OF TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING HAS BECOME CITY WIDE THE CREATION MADNESS THE CREATION OF WORLD ORDER INCORPORATION CANADA NO MORE FREEDOM EXPORTATION OF ALL THE HEAVENLY CHILDREN AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS FOR EVER FOR EXTERNAL LIFE FOR ETERNITY ON MOTHER EARTH THE LIGHT ON MOTHER EARTH IS GOING OUT MOTHER EARTH PURPOSE IS NO MORE MOTHER EARTH IS RETURNING TO THE HEAVENS

DOUGLAS HANLON ALL THIS MADNESS IS THE CREATION OF THE MAN MADE WORLD NOT THE NATURAL WORLD WITH NATURE AND ALL ARE SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS IT STARTED THE DAY THE EUROPEANS CAME THE YEAR 1492 THE DAY THEY BUILD THE FIRST SHIPS THE MADNESS STARTED AROUND MOTHER EARTH COMMERCIAL TRADE OF WHITE AND BLACK SLAVE TO BUILD THE EMPIRE FOR THE RICH COUNTY ON THE BACKS SLAVE FROM 1492 TO 2017 TO DAY THERE STILL SLAVE 14.5 MILLIONS IN INDIA SLAVE AND MILLIONS MORE THEN WE HAVE THE WORKING SLAVE THE EMPLOYEES ALL WORKING TO BUILD A CITY TORONTO CANADA HOW MANY WILL IT TAKE THE FAMILY IN THE CITY OF TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING 1950 LONG BRANCH ARMY CAMP AND STAFF HOUSE WERE LIVING IN THE NATURAL WORLD WITH NATURE WE WERE NOT SLAVE WE WERE FREE WE ALL WERE 1378 FAMILY 600 CHILDREN KINGDOMS OF ONE SELF WE ALL SPENT 15 YEARS FROM 1943 TO 1958 THE TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING CLOSED 1958 AND ALL THE LOCATION WERE TRONEN

douglas hanlon person possessed exorcism genes family history dating back to yesterday alcohol cause people to be possessed a mother drinking while having a child now the child is possessed now it carry in the child gene the creation of monsters dysfunctional family there been a trillions children the population to day is 8,000,000,000 of these four trillions people dysfunctional world wide four trillions possessed the creation of madness world wide THE USE OF ILLEGAL DRUGS PRESCRIPTION DRUGS CAR MOTOR CYCLE COMMERCIAL SHIPPING ACCIDENTS WORLD WIDE POSSESSED EXORCISM NEEDED STOP DRINKING STOP HAVING CHILDREN I MY SELF HAVE SEEN WHOLE FAMILY DYSFUNCTIONAL FROM THE TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING 1943 TO 1958 AND RIGHT UP TO 2017 STILL HEAVING CHILDREN STILL CREATING THE MADNESS THAT COME FROM ALCOHOL AND DRUGS IN THE CO-OP NPH THE CITY OF TORONTO HOUSING A BREEDING GROUND CRIME CHILD ABUSE AND MADNESS IN 600 LOCATION IN THE TORONTO CITY EMERGENCY HOUSING HA NOT CHANGE FROM 1943 TO 2017 THERE ARE NO GOOD INTENTIONS JUST A QUITE FIX PAY FOR BY THE TAXES TO GET THE PROBLEMS TO GO AWAY WHERE SINGLE MOTHER WITH CHILDREN HAVE NOT BEEN PROTECTED FROM HARM IT JUST ANTHER TORONTO JAIL A PRISON A DETENTION LOCK UP TEMPORARY SHELTERS FOR HUNDRED OF UN WANTED CHILDREN BY DYSFUNCTIONAL PARENTS LOOKING FOR A FREE RIDE ON THE BACKS OF THEIR CHILDREN MOTHERS DRUNKEN MOTHER BRING THE WRONG PEOPLE LOW LIFE THAT COULD END UP TAKING THE CHILDREN LIFE POSSESSED EXORISM LONG BRANCH ARMY CAMP AND STAFF HOUSING TORONTO CANADA

WARNING A MIRACLE FROM HEAVEN FIRES IN BC CANADA DO NOT BUILD HOMES WERE FOREST FIRE ARE NEEDED IN NATURE THE NATURAL WORLD THE WORLD THE PURPOSE OF MOTHER HAS BEEN MISS USED FOR THE LAST 10.000 YEAR THE WORLD BELONG TO THE CHILDREN OF HEAVEN NOT THE MAN MADE WORLD TO CONTROL

DOUGLAS HANLON SO WHEN THE END OF MOTHER EARTH ENDS AND RETURN TO THE HEAVENS DO NOT BLAME IT ON OUR HEAVENLY FARTHER BLAME IT ON THE MAN MADE WORLD FROM 10.000 YEARS AGO IT THEIR CREATIONS THAT HAS CAUSE MOTHER EARTH TO HAVE NO PURPOSE NO MORE SHE IS SLOWLY RETURNING TO THE HEAVENS

douglas hanlon TOBACCO NUMBER ONE PROBLEM WORLD WIDE NICOTINE AND 3000 CHEMICAL ADD TO TOBACCO THE MAKE TOBACCO AN ADDICTION ONE SMOKE EQUALS 20 PUFFS TWENTY HITS OF TOBACCO AND 3000 CHEMICALS IN EACH PUFF THE COST OF ONE PACKAGE 15.00 DOLLARS TIME 365 EQUALS $5.474.00 A FAMILY OF FIVE EQUALS $27,375.00 EACH YEAR THESE ARE THE CREATIONS OF A FAMILY DEBTS NEVER TO SAVE THE COST OF THE DOWN PAYMENT OF A HOME FOR ALL THE NEXT GENERATIONS TO COME GENOCIDE TO ALL THEIR CHILDREN TO COME TO LIVE IN POVERTY IN CANADA TORONTO A SLAVE TO TOBACCO A PLANT THERE ANOTHER ONE COMING POT THERE WILL ALL SO BE CHEMICALS ADD TO POT WERE WILL ALL THE PEOPLE GO IT 2017 NOW THE LONG BRANCH ARMY CAMP AND STAFF HOUSE 1943 TO 1958 WHEN THE TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING CLOSED THAT IT IT DID NOT CLOSED IT JUST GOT BIGGER WORLD WIDE JUST AN ADDICTION THE PEOPLE AND THEIR CHILDREN HAVE NO WERE TO GO SLAVES TO TH SYSTEM OF THE TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING OF TODAY 2017 THE CREATION OF A WAITING LIST AROUND THE WORLD IN THE MILLIONS GENOCIDE TO THE HOME LESS LIVING IN SLUMS NEVER TO SEE A HOME BUT THEY CAN COUNT ON SEEING TOBACCO TOBACCO LIKE THE SOLDERS OF THE WORLD WARS CAME HOME WITH THE ADDICTION OF TOBACCO THEY CAME HOME WITH A BAD HABIT A DEBT AN ADDICTION

long branch army camp emergency housing city of toronto 1943 to 1958 2017 there are 600 city housing high rise apartments building 300 apartments in each building they are creations of the post war emergency 1950 stand barrack 1 geco 2 long branch army camp and staff house 3 malton 4 little norway HOUSING WERE BARRACKS WHO IS ARE HEAVENLY FARTHER YOU SEE HIM EACH AN EVERY DAY YOU SEE HIM IN ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS HE IS PART OF ALL THE LIFE ON MOTHER EARTH AND THE HEAVENS HIS WISDOM IS A TRILLION LIGHT YEARS AHEAD OF US AND THE SOUL THE KEEPER OF LIFE RECORDS IS A TRILLION YEARS AHEAD OF OUR HEAVENLY FARTHER YOU DO NOT THINK WE ARE THE ONLY LIFE THAT HAS BEEN CREATED IN THE HEAVENS WE ALL ARE SO SMALL LIVING ON A GRAIN OF SAND IN THE HEAVENS WE ALL LOOK AT THE MOTHER EARTH AS A BIG WORLD BUT THE REASON THAT IS IS BECAUSE WE ARE SO SMALL WE WERE NEVER MENT TO CARRY WISDOM AS PART OF OUR PURPOSE THE JOURNEY TO TRAVEL AROUND MOTHER EARTH AND COMPLETING THE CYCLE OF THE CREATION OF LIFE THEN THE MAN MADE WORLD WAS CREATED GREED OUT OF THE NATURAL WORLD OF NATURE THE ONLY PURPOSE OF MOTHER EARTH IS A HONEYMOON STAR IN THE HEAVEN GOD GIVE EACH AND EVER LIFE GIFTS BIRDS FLY SAY NO MORE A GIFT TO FLY A ROUND THE WORLD HOW BEAUTIFUL EACH AND WONDER FILL EACH ONE IS ONLY GOD HAS THE WISDOM OF LIFE WE HAVE NO UNDERSTANDING OF LIFE AND NEVER WILL THAT GOD WISDOM STOP LOOKING OR THING OF IT THERE ONLY THE PURPOSE TO LOVE ONE ANTHER FOR EVER AND ALL THE CHILDREN GIVEN BIRTH OUR AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS CHILDREN PRINCE AND PRINCESS LOVE FOR EVER AND EVER STOP TRYING TO BE SOME ONE ELSE BE YOUR SELF A KINGDOM ON TO ONE SELF TO BE JOINT TO AN OTHER KINGDOM OF ONE SELF TO BE ABLE TO CREATE A MIRACLE THE CREATION OF LIFE THIS IS EVER ONE STOP TRYING TO BE SOME ONE ELSE YON ARE THE KINGDOM OF ONE SELF ONE OF THE TRILLION UPON TRILLION UPON TRILLION OF A KINGDOM ON TO ONE SELF OF US AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS KINGDOM OF ONE SELF ALL THEIR PRINCE AND PRINCESS LOVE FOR EVER TO ALL THEIR SOCIAL FAMILY FRENDS

douglas hanlon there are 8,000,000,000 TRILLION PEOPLE WIDE 8,000,000,000 TIME $100.00 8,000,000,000, TIME A $1,000.00 ONE THOUSAND TIMES 8,000,000,000 equals EIGHT THOUSAND TRILLION DOLLARS TO HELP PEOPLE ON A MASS SCALE TO RECOVERY EVEN $10.00 TIMES $8,000,000,000 equals $80,000,000,000 EIGHTY TRILLION DOLLARS IT THE ONLY WAY WITH OUT ALL THE KINGDOMS OF ONE SELF THERE IS NO HOPE WITH EVERY ONE THERE THE CREATION OF LOVE FOR ALL THE SOUL WHAT OUR HEAVENLY FATHER WOULD LIKE TO SEE THE CREATION OF HEAVEN ON MOTHER EARTH

douglas hanlon where will the people CANADA STUDIES HAVE FOUND THAT 235,000 CANADIANS EXPERIENCE HOUSING INSTABILITY EVERY YEAR 5000 OF THOSE SLEEP OUT SIDE AND 180,000 SEEKING REFUGE IN EMERGENCY SHELTERS THE TOTAL NUMBERS MAY BE HIGHER 1.2 MILLION 18 % CANADA SPENDING 7 BILLION ON THE HOMELESSNESS ANNUALLY ALL OF THIS NEVER HAD TO HAPPEN THE REASON THIS HAPPEN STARTED 1604 FREE LAND GRANTS TO SETTERS COMING TO THE NEW WORLD BY 1850 ALL THE FREE GRANTS WERE NO MORE NO FORESIGHT GOVERNMENTS AROUND MOTHER EARTH ONLY LOOK AT TOMORROW 2017 AUG I THE LONG BRANCH ARMY CAMP AND STAFF HOUSE AND ALL THE OTHER EMERGENCY HOUSING LOCATIONS REGENT PARK TORONTO CANADA AND ALL THE OTHER ONES A CROSS CANADA THERE ARE 8,000,000,000,TRILLION PEOPLE ON MOTHER EARTH WHO GOING TO FEED THEM WHO GOING TO HOUSE THEM IT GOING TO HAVE TO BE THEM THEM THE 8,000,000,000 10.00 EACH EQUAL 80,000,000,000 TRILLIONS DOLLARS IT CALL FREEDOM FAITH AND LOVE OF THE 8,000,000,000 TRILLION OF THE 8,000,000,000 4,000,000,000 TRILLION PEOPLE ARE DYSFUNCTIONAL AND ALL THOSE WILL MIX WITH THE OTHER 4,000,000,000 TRILLIONS THE CREATION OF AN DYSFUNCTIONAL MOTHER EARTH FOR EVER THE CREATION OF HELL ON MOTHER EARTH WHY BECAUSE OF THE CREATION OF THE MAN MADE WORLD SHIPS WORLD TRADE SLAVERY THE CREATIONS OF TEMPTATIONS THERE ARE 8,000,000,000 TRILLIONS TEMPTATIONS ONE IN EACH ONE OF US HELP EACH OTHER WHERE WILL ALL THE PEOPLE GO 2017 AUG 1

douglas hanlon were will all the people go1950 toronto emergency housing hurricane hazel 1954 TO DAY 2017 ON MOTHER EARTH 8 TRILLION PEOPLE HAVE BE COME DYSFUNCTIONAL WORD WIDE CAUSE BY THE CREATION OF THE MAN MADE WORLD CREATION 2500 YEAR BEFORE BC ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS HAVE NOT CHANGE THEIR WAY OF LIFE FROM THE BEGINNING OF TIME WE ARE NO DIFFERENT THEN THEY ARE ALL OF US HAVE THE SAME BLOOD GOD PRESENT HAS ALL WAY BEEN WITH US AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS THE PURPOSE OF LIFE IS NOT TO CHANGE THE PURPOSE LIVE IN THE NATURAL WORLD WITH NATURE AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS THERE ARE ONLY KINGDOMS OF ONE SELF PRINCE AND PRINCESS

douglas hanlon dysfunctional family is a family in which conflict misbehavior cause by poverty and the man made world from 2500 year before BC and often child neglect or abuse on the of the individual parents all so the temptations of poverty and the man made world temptations and occur continually and regulatory leading other family members and other family to mix their ideology of abuse actions governments all so create city emergency housing across the world governments across the world spent billions each year on a DYSFUNCTIONAL WORLD OF 8 TRILLIONS PEOPLE CHILDREN SOME TIME GROW UP WITH THE UNDERSTANDING THAT THEIR BEHAVIOR IS NORMAL FIRST STOP HAVING CHILDREN SECOND EACH OF THE 8 TRILLION PEOPLE PAID ONE DOLLARS EACH EQUAL 8 TRILLION DOLLARS THE DYSFUNCTIONAL STARTED 2500 YEAR A GO THAT WHY EVERY ONE THINK EVER THING IS NORMAL

douglas hanlon IF WE ALL COME FROM A GRAIN OF SAND MOTHER EARTH HOW IS A SPACE SHIP GOING TRAVEL TO THE STARS THE COST IS IN THE TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS THE WASTED OF MONEY AND TIME MONEY THAT COULD BE INVESTED IN THE WORLD RECOVERY ALL SO THE MONEY INVESTED POLICE DEPARTMENT AROUND MOTHER EARTH THE ARMY WAR SHIPS PLANES PERSONAL COST FOR ALL THE COUNTRIES AROUND MOTHER EARTH IN THE TRILLION TRILLION OF DOLLARS GO IN TO SPACE IS GENOCIDE IT NOT LIKE CROSSING THE OCEAN REMEMBER WE ARE LIVING ON A GRAIN OF SAND THE SIZE OF THE SPACE SHIP AND HOW SMALL WE ARE WE CAN WALK AROUND MOTHER EARTH 50 TIMES IN ONES LIFE TIME THIS IS SO BECAUSE MOTHER EARTH SUPPLY US WITH ALL THAT IS NEEDED TO DO SO SPACE IS THE SPIRIT NOT EMPTINESS SPACE IS THE SPIRIT OF ALL THAT IS IT NOT EMPTINESS THE SPIRIT CONTROL ALL THAT IS THAT WHY WE ALL HAVE A SPIRIT FOR LOVE AND ETERNAL LIFE FOR ETERNITY ARE SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS SPIRITS ARE ALL ONE WITH MOTHER EARTH WE ARE NOT OUTER SPACE IS NOT MENT FOR US WE ARE ALL TO SMALL PLANETS LIKE THE SIZE OF THE SUN IF YOU CAN NOT WALK AROUND IT IN A 50 YEARS LIFE TIME THERE NO REASON TO GO THERE SAVE THE MONEY RETURN TO THE NATURAL WORLD MOTHER EARTH WITH NATURE FAITH AND LOVE THE MAN MADE WORLD HAS CREATED HELL ON EARTH WITH THEIR ACTIONS LEAVING MOTHER EARTH WITH NO PUSPOSE ANY MORE LOOKING AFTER ALL THE CREATIONS OF LIFE ON MOTHER EARTH

douglah hanlon MAKE THE WORLD MOTHER EARTH ONE AGAIN ONE COUNTY ONE PEOPLE GIVE BACK THE LAND TO THE PEOPLE SO THEY CAN RETURN HOME TO THEIR FOR FARTHER AND FOR MOTHER FROM WERE GOD PLACE ALL OF US WHEN WE WERE GIVEN BIRTH ON MOTHER EARTH GOING HOME NOT TO BE DISPLACED PEOPLE ALL AROUND MOTHER EARTH WE WERE NEVER MENT TO LIVE TOGETHER AS ONE ON MOTHER EARTH

douglas hanlon I HAVE LIVE IN 125 PLACES IN MY LIFE TIME FIRST 15 YEAR TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING TORONTO CANADA 7 LOCATION PLACES TORONTO OUT SIDE TORONTO BC SUDBURY ONT AND OTHER IF I WAS FREE TO JOURNEY THE WORLD AND BUILD MY OWN SHELTERS THE THINGS I WOULD HAVE SEEN NEW BIRTHS OF LIVE ALL THE CREATIONS OF HEAVEN AND ALL THE PEOPLE AND THEIR FAMILY AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS CHILDREN AND HAVE A TRILLION MEMORY AND THE STORTIES I COULD TELL AND CREATION OF A FAMILY ON THE JOURNEY SO THEY TO WOULD ALSO HAVE MEMORY OF LIFE TO TELL STORTIES OF THEIR MEMORY IN THE END ALL WE HAVE IS MEMORY

douglas hanlon MY FARTHER GIVEN BIRTH 1897 LIVERPOOL ENGLAND JOHN HANLON SERVICE CANADIAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE 1917 NOV.TO JUNE 1919 MEDALS AND DECORATIONS BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDAL FIRST WORLD WAR HE ALSO SPENT 15 YEARS IN THE TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING 1943 TO 1958 MY MOTHER GIVEN BIRTH 1902 BIRMINGHAM ENGLAND SHE ALSO SPENT 15 YEARS TORONTO EMERGENCY HOUSING GECO LONG BRANCH ARMY CAMP AND STAFF AND EARLSCOURT PARK TORONTO MY SISTER AND BROTHER WERE WITH US LOW RENT AFFORDABLE EMERGENCY $42.00 PER MONTH 1943 SECOND WORLD WAR THE PROBLEMS WITH ANY EMERGENCY HOUSING ACROSS CANADA AND THE WORLD IN 2017 AND ON THERE IS NO EQUITY GAIN YOU ONLY HAVE ASSETS AND LIABILITIES YOU NEVER OWN THE LAND OR THE HOUSE OR THE APARTMENT THE LAND GO UP IN VALUE EQUITY IS A DOWN PAYMENT ON A MORTGAGE EQUITY IS A EDUCATION FOR YOUR CHILDREN FOR YOUR RETIREMENT EQUITY AND THEIR RETIREMENT HOME THE CHILDREN SELL THE HOME KEEP THE EQUITY FOR DOWN PAYMENTS FOR EACH CHILD EQUITY TO START A BUSINESS THE TORONTO TCHC TORONTO SOCIAL HOUSING CO’OP NPH ANY PLACE YOU LIVE IN CANADA IF YOU DO NOT PAID A MORTGAGE YOU AND YOUR CHILDREN WILL NEVER HAVE EQUITY WITH OUT EQUITY EACH OF YOUR GENERATIONS TO COME WILL FALL ON HARD TIMES BECAUSE TO GET A MORTGAGE ON A $1,000,000 HOME YOUR IN COME NEED TO BE TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS THE MAYOR SAY TORONTO SOCIAL HOUSING IS RECEIVED $350,000,000 MILLION THERE ARE OVER 3000 HOUSING LOCATIONS IN NEED OF RETROFIT NEW BOILER NEW WIRING THAT 2000 LOCATIONS DIVIDED IN TO 350,000,000 EQUAL 175,000 OVER 5 YEAR EQUAL 35,000 DOLLARS AND STILL NO EQUITY FOR YOU COST OF LIVING 2017 BILLS 400,00 FOOD 600.00 RENT 1500 TO 2500 CAR 250 TO 550 DOLLARS IF YOU HAVE A WIFE ADD ANOTHER 2700 THE EMERGENCY HOUSING ACROSS CANADA IS LIVING OFF THE BACKS OF EACH GENERATION SINCE THE FIRST RENT WAS PAID TO LAND LORD 2500 BC YEAR BUT IT NOW 2017 A $1,000 NOTE TO DAY DOES NOT GO ANY WERE TO DAY IT ONLY ALLOW YOU TO START THE TRIP YOU PLAN TO GO ON REMEMBER EQUITY IS ALL WAY NEEDED

douglas hanlon THE PURPOSE OF CREATION OF THE CYCLE OF LIFE THE JOINTING OF ONE FLESH OF A PRINCE OF A KINGDOM ON TO ONE SELF AND A PRINCESS OF A KINGDOM ON TO ONE SELF TO BECOME THE CREATORS OF LIFE THE CREATORS OF LOVE THE SPIRIT AND SOUL AND THE ETERNAL LIFE FOR ETERNITY

douglas hanlon MY PURPOSE BORN 1943 TO SEE THE WORLD THE WAY IT IS AND ALL THE THE PEOPLE ACTION FOR 75 YEARS WHEN NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICAN AND WEST INDIES CARIBBEAN 1492 CHANGE EVERY THING PROFITS FREE LAND GRANTS 1604 TO 1750 SLAVERY 1812 THEN SLAVERY UP TO 2017 TODAY THE WHOLE WORLD MOTHER EARTH WAR WAR WAR WAR OVER 200 YEAR IMPRISONMENT OF ALL THE PEOPLE AROUND MOTHER EARTH THEIR PURPOSE IS NO MORE THE MAN MADE WORLD CREATED PROFITS MONEY AND MORE MONEY I SEE OVER THE LAST YEARS 1900 TO 2017 COMPLETING THE PURPOSE AND ENDING THE CYCLE OF LIFE FOR US AND ALL ARE SOCIAL FAMILIES FRIENDS I SEE THE BEGINNING OF A DYSFUNCTIONAL WORLD ON MOTHER EARTH A GRAIN OF SAND IN THE HEAVENS 8 TRILLION PEOPLE DYSFUNCTIONAL THE CREATION OF 2500 YEAR BY THE MADE WORLD BUT THERE IS STILL HOPE TO CREATE HOPE ALL THE DYSFUNCTIONAL KINGDOMS ON TO ONE SELF 8 TRILLIONS KINGDOMS JOINT VENTURE TO JOINT AS ONE KINGDOM TO PROTECT ALL THE MOTHER AND CHILDREN GOD WISDOM 2017 FOR ME DOUGLAS HANLON I SEE IT THE ONLY HOPE FOR ALL THE CHILDREN OUR AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILIES FRIENDS CHILDREN GODS WISDOM WE CAN NOT RETURN TO THE NATURAL WORLD WITH NATURE BECAUSE IN 1604 TO 1750 WAS FREE LAND GRANTS ALL OF NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA FOR HOMESTEADING FARMS CATTLE RANCHES GOD IS THE LAND LORD AND CARE TAKER OF MOTHER EARTH HIS PRESENT IS ALL WAY PRESENT ON MOTHER EARTH I SEE THE FUTURE GOD WISDOM

douglas hanlon emergency housing toronto there only one wrong in the would not to tell some one some thing that will help them and their families and their generations to come we save $400.00 a monthly when the family change their DIET TO A VEGETARIAN DIET WE STOP EATING OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS LOWER BLOOD PRESSURE REDUCE TYPE 2 DIABETES PREVENT STROKE CONDITIONS REVERSES ATHEROSCLEROSIS REDUCE HEART DISEASE 50% REDUCE HEART SURGERY RISK 80% PREVENT MANY FORMS OF CANCERS STRONGER IMMUNE SYSTEM IN CREASE LIFE EXPECTANCY 15 YEARS MORE HIGH IQ CONSERVE UP TO 70% SAVE YOUR LIFE AND ALL YOUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIEND LIFE FOR ALL THE GENERATIONS TO BE GIVEN LIFE HEALTHY PLANET DO NOT CLEAR THE AMAZONIAN RAIN FOREST FOR ANIMAL GRAZING A SALVATION FOR WORLD HUNGER ALL OF THESE AND MANY MORE OVER 30 YEARS THE MONEY YOU SAVE WILL PAID FOR A HOME AND MANY MORE GOOD THINGS TO JOINT ALL THE KINGDOM OF ONE SELF 8,000,000,000 PEOPLE ON MOTHER EARTH AND ALL OUR SOCIAL FAMILY FRIENDS THE NUMBERS ARE IN THE TRILLIONS TIME THE TRILLION

douglas hanlon JAAN PILL WHERE WILL THE PEOPLE GO A LETTER TO THE PRIME MINISTER OF CANADA JUSTIN PIERRE JAME TRUDEAU AND HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN BUCKINGHAM PALACE LONDON SW1A1AA BOTH HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN AND THE PRIME MINISTER ARE ON THE WORLD STAGE THEIR INTEREST IN THE EMERGENCY HOUSING TORONTO CANADA 1943 TO 1958 TO 2017 WHERE WILL ALL THE PEOPLE GO WORLD WIDE CAN PLACE A LIGHT ON THE TIMES TO COME FOR ALL THE EIGHT TRILLIONS AROUND THE MOTHER EARTH I MY SELF STOOD FACE TO FACE IN HIGH PARK TORONTO IN FRONT OF THE QUEEN I WAS EIGHT YEAR OLD I MY SELF STOOD FACE TO FACE TORONTO IN FRONT JUSTIN TRUDEAU FARTHER I WAS 28 YEARS OLD I WAS GOING TO GEORGE BROWN COLLEGE THERE IS A PURPOSE TO THE PEOPLE YOU MEET IT FAITH AND A CREATION OF A MIRACLE